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Lactose is the main sugar found in milk.

Biology and Society: Got Lactose?. Lactose is the main sugar found in milk. Lactose intolerance is the inability to properly digest lactose. Lactose intolerance can be addressed by avoiding lactose-containing foods or consuming lactase pills along with food. Chapter Thread.

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Lactose is the main sugar found in milk.

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  1. Biology and Society: Got Lactose? • Lactose is the main sugar found in milk. • Lactose intolerance is the inability to properly digest lactose. • Lactose intolerance can be addressed by • avoiding lactose-containing foods or • consuming lactase pills along with food.

  2. Chapter Thread

  3. Organic Compounds • A cell is mostly water. • The rest of the cell consists mainly of carbon-based molecules. • Carbon forms large, complex, and diverse molecules necessary for life’s functions. • Organic compounds are carbon-based molecules. (With the exception of CO and CO2)

  4. Carbon Chemistry • Carbon is a versatile molecule. • Carbon can share electrons with other atoms in four covalent bonds. • There is a tremendous diversity of carbon skeletons varying in size and branching pattern. • The carbon atoms of organic compounds can also bond with other elements, most commonly hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.

  5. Variations in carbon skeletons

  6. Variations in carbon skeletons

  7. Carbon Chemistry (Cont.) • One of the simplest organic compounds is methane (CH4), with a single carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms. • Larger organic compounds are the main molecules in gasoline and are important fuels in your body.

  8. Three representations of methane, a simple organic compound

  9. Hydrocarbons as fuel

  10. Carbon Chemistry (Cont.) • The unique properties of an organic compound depend on • its carbon skeleton and • the atoms attached to the skeleton. • In an organic compound, the groups of atoms directly involved in chemical reactions are called functional groups. • Many biological molecules have two or more functional groups.

  11. Giant Molecules from Smaller Building Blocks • On a molecular scale, many of life’s molecules are gigantic, earning the name macromolecules. • Three categories of macromolecules are • carbohydrates, • proteins, and • nucleic acids • lipids (fats) are also large molecules but are not polymers

  12. Giant Molecules from Smaller Building Blocks (Cont.) • Macromolecules are polymers, large molecules made by stringing together many smaller molecules called monomers. • A dehydrationreaction • links two monomers together and • removes a molecule of water. • The breakdown of polymers occurs by hydrolysis, by adding water to them, a process that is essentially the reverse of a dehydration reaction.

  13. Synthesis and breakdown of polymers

  14. Synthesis and breakdown of polymers

  15. Large Biological Molecules • Four categories of large biological molecules are found in all living creatures: • carbohydrates • lipids • proteins • nucleic acids

  16. Carbohydrates • Carbohydrates include sugars and polymers of sugar. • In animals, carbohydrates are • a primary source of dietary energy and • raw material for manufacturing other kinds of organic compounds. • In plants, carbohydrates serve as a building material for much of the plant body.

  17. Monosaccharides • Monosaccharides • are the monomers of carbohydrates and • cannot be broken down into smaller sugars. • Common examples are glucose in sports drinks and fructose found in fruit. • Both of these simple sugars are also in honey. • Glucose and fructose are isomers, molecules that have the same molecular formula but different structures.

  18. Monosaccharides (simple sugars)

  19. Monosaccharides (simple sugars)

  20. Monosaccharides (simple sugars)

  21. Monosaccharides • Monosaccharides, particularly glucose, are the main fuels for cellular work. • In water, many monosaccharides form rings. Checkpoint: • All carbohydrates consist of one or more _______, also called simple sugars.

  22. The ring structure of glucose

  23. Disaccharides • A disaccharide is constructed from two monosaccharides by a dehydration reaction. Disaccharides include • lactose in milk, • maltose in beer and malted milk shakes, and • sucrose in table sugar. Sucrose is the main carbohydrate in plant sap. • High-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) is made by a commercial process that converts natural glucose in corn syrup to much sweeter fructose.

  24. Disaccharide (double sugar) formation

  25. Disaccharide (double sugar) formation

  26. A revised food label displaying the amount of added sugars

  27. Polysaccharides • Polysaccharides • are complex carbohydrates and • are made of long chains of sugars—polymers of monosaccharides. • Starch • is a familiar example of a polysaccharide, • consists of long strings of glucose monomers, and • is used by plant cells to store energy.

  28. Polysaccharides

  29. Three common polysaccharides

  30. Polysaccharides • Glycogen • is used by animal cells to store energy and • is broken down to release glucose when you need energy. • Cellulose • is the most abundant organic compound on Earth, • forms cable-like fibrils in the tough walls that enclose plant cells, and • cannot be broken by any enzyme produced by animals.

  31. Polysaccharides https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zm_DyD6FJ0 Carbohydates (8.48)

  32. Identifying Major Themes • Plants use glucose as both a source of energy for cells and a building block of their bodies. Which major theme is illustrated by this action? • The relationship of structure to function • Information flow • Pathways that transform energy and matter • Interactions within biological systems • Evolution

  33. Identifying Major Themes (Cont.) • Both starch and cellulose consist of joined monosaccharide monomers, but the way that they are joined makes starch digestible by humans and cellulose not. Which major theme is illustrated by this action? • The relationship of structure to function • Information flow • Pathways that transform energy and matter • Interactions within biological systems • Evolution

  34. Lipids • Almost all carbohydrates are hydrophilic (“water-loving”) molecules that dissolve readily in water. • Lipids are hydrophobic, unable to mix with water. • Lipids also differ from carbohydrates, proteins, and nucleic acids in that neither are they huge macromolecules nor are they necessarily polymers built from repeating monomers. • Lipids are a diverse group of molecules made from different molecular building blocks.

  35. The separation of hydrophobic (oil) andhydrophilic (vinegar) components in salad dressing

  36. Fats • A typical fat, or triglyceride, consists of a glycerol molecule joined with three fatty acid molecules via a dehydration reaction. • Fats perform essential functions in the human body, including • energy storage, • cushioning, and • insulation.

  37. The synthesis and structure of a triglyceride molecule

  38. The synthesis and structure of a triglyceride molecule

  39. Fats (Cont.) • If the carbon skeleton of a fatty acid has fewer than the maximum number of hydrogens at the double bond, it is unsaturated. • If it has the maximum number of hydrogens, it is saturated. • A saturated fat has all three of its fatty acids saturated.

  40. Relative amounts of different fats

  41. Fats (Cont.) • Most animal fats • have a relatively high proportion of saturated fatty acids, • can easily stack, tending to be solid at room temperature, and • contribute to atherosclerosis. • Most plant and fish fats tend to be • high in unsaturated fatty acids and • liquid at room temperature.

  42. Fats (Cont.) • Hydrogenation • adds hydrogen, • converts unsaturated fats to saturated fats, • makes liquid fats solid at room temperature, and • creates trans fats, a type of unsaturated fat that is particularly bad for your health.

  43. Types of fats

  44. Steroids • Steroids are very different from fats in structure and function. • The carbon skeleton has four fused rings. • Steroids vary in the functional groups attached to this set of rings, and these chemical variations affect their function. • Cholesterol is • a key component of cell membranes and • the “base steroid” from which your body produces other steroids, such as estrogen and testosterone.

  45. Examples of steroids

  46. Steroids (Cont.) • Synthetic anabolic steroids • are variants of testosterone, • mimic some of its effects, • may be prescribed to treat diseases such as cancer and AIDS, • are abused by athletes to build up their muscles quickly, and • can cause serious physical and mental problems. • Most athletic organizations ban the use of anabolic steroids.

  47. Steroids (Cont.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGHD9e3yRIU Lipids (7.04)

  48. Steroids and the modern athlete

  49. Proteins • Proteins • are polymers of amino acid monomers, • account for more than 50% of the dry weight of most cells, and • are instrumental in almost everything cells do.

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